O’Hara was drawn to both poetry and the visual arts for much of his life. He studied at Harvard University (B.A., 1950) and the University of Michigan (M.A., 1951). During the 1960s, as an assistant curator at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, O’Hara sent his fine criticism of current painting and sculpture to such periodicals as Art News, and he wrote catalogs for exhibits that he arranged. Meanwhile, local theatres were producing many of his experimental one-act plays, including Try! Try! (1960), about a soldier’s return to his wife and her new lover.

O’Hara, however, considered himself primarily a poet. His pieces, which mark him as a member of the New York school of poets, are a mixture of quotations, gossip, phone numbers, commercials—any mote of experience that he found appealing. He related what was happening to him rather than trying to clarify experiences for the reader. O’Hara also drew inspiration from nonliterary sources, including free-form jazz and the abstract paintings of acquaintances such as Jackson Pollock and Larry Rivers, whose work he championed in art criticism. (His interest in both poetry and visual art came together with a series of “poem-paintings” he produced in collaboration with the artist Norman Bluhm in 1960.) The results vary from the merely idiosyncratic to the dynamic and humorous. His reputation grew in the 1960s to the point that he was considered one of the most important and influential postwar American poets at the time of his death, at age 40, after being hit by a car while on vacation.

O’Hara’s first volume of poetry was A City Winter , and Other Poems (1952); The Collected . His most celebrated collections are Meditations in an Emergency (1957) and Lunch Poems (1964). The Collected Poems of Frank O’Hara (1971) was and its successor, Selected Poems (2008), were published posthumously.